Effects of acute and repeated administration of the selective M4 PAM VU0152099 on cocaine vs. food choice in male rats

Author:

Thomsen MorganeORCID,Crittenden Jill R.,Lindsley Craig W.,Graybiel Ann M.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractLigands that stimulate muscarinic acetylcholine receptors 1 and 4 (M1, M4) have shown promising effects as putative pharmacotherapy for cocaine use disorder in rodent assays. We have previously shown reductions in cocaine effects with acute M4 stimulation, as well as long-lasting, delayed, reductions in cocaine taking and cocaine seeking with combined M1/M4 receptor stimulation or with M1 stimulation alone. M4 stimulation opposes dopaminergic signaling acutely, but direct dopamine receptor antagonists have proved unhelpful in managing cocaine use disorder because they lose efficacy with long-term administration. It is therefore critical to determine whether M4 approaches themselves can remain effective with repeated or chronic dosing. We assessed the effects of repeated administration of the M4 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) VU0152099 in rats trained to choose between intravenous cocaine and a liquid food reinforcer, to obtain quantitative measurement of whether M4 stimulation could produce delayed and lasting reduction in cocaine taking. VU0152099 produced progressively augmenting suppression of cocaine choice and cocaine intake, but produced neither rebound nor lasting effects after treatment ended. To compare and contrast effects of M1 vs. M4 stimulation, we tested whether the M4 PAM VU0152100 suppressed cocaine self-administration in mice lacking CalDAG-GEFI signaling factor, required for M1-mediated suppression of cocaine self-administration. CalDAG-GEFI ablation had no effect on M4-mediated suppression of cocaine self-administration. These findings support the potential usefulness of M4 PAMs as pharmacotherapy to manage cocaine use disorder, alone or in combination with M1-selective ligands, and show that M1 and M4 stimulation modulate cocaine-taking behavior by distinct mechanisms.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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